Friday, August 26, 2011 2:55:29 PM@Revolutioniz Is plagerism the new War on Drugs? I keep forgeting who to shame these days...

@I-IS-BORED It's not if you consider a description as representative of the poster. I was totaly fooled! I agree with MildCorma, it's just showing how only the metal gets hot. Although, as chimmeychang point's out, they never said the water was pure. Any material will, under the right conditions, conduct electricity.

Friday, August 26, 2011 2:36:56 PM@Revolutioniz Is plagerism the new War on Drugs? I keep forgeting who to shame these days...

@I-IS-BORED It's not if you consider a description as representative of the poster. I was totaly fooled! I agree with MildCorma, it's just showing how only the metal gets hot. Although, as chimmeychang point's out, they never said the water was pure. Any material will, under the right conditions, conduct electricity.

Friday, August 26, 2011 2:22:23 PM@Revolutioniz Is plagerism the new War on Drugs? I keep forgeting who to shame these days...

@I-IS-BORED It's not if you consider a description as representative of the poster. I was totaly fooled! I agree with MildCorma, it's just showing how only the metal gets hot. Although, as chimmeychang point's out, they never said the water was pure. Any material will, under the right conditions, conduct electricity.

Friday, August 26, 2011 7:40:48 AMDude, Piepig! Way to cool the fire between MildCorma and Revolutionz! (Hee-hee) On a side note I totally think Revolutionz is some sort of a student cause grammar woah! Also, thanks for the laugh! ^_^

Friday, August 26, 2011 7:39:17 AMalso, the ice may be suspending metals that aid in conductivity, no one said it was pure distilled water. also also, when salt water is bombarded with the right frequency of radio waves it burns due to the release of hydrogen, or so i read somewhere once. I am not sure if distilled water would do this with just heat generated from an electromagnetic current, but its not too big a leap.